Gold & Precious Metals
Seasoned Investors Turn Their Backs on Gold
Posted by Bill Bonner: Diary of a Rogue Economist
on Friday, 22 February 2013 13:44
The “recovery” has prompted an appetite for more “productive” investments…
EVEN SEASONED travelers can make remarkably dumb mistakes, writes Daily Reckoning founder Bill Bonner.
That’s why we are writing to you from Baltimore rather than from Beijing. For the second time in a single week, we got to Dulles International Airport yesterday and discovered that we lacked the proper visa for travel to China.
You don’t always go where you intend to go, but you always end up where you ought to be. Why ought we be in Baltimore? We don’t know. But here we are.
Even seasoned investors make mistakes too. And now they seem to be selling gold. Yes, dear reader, our favorite metal is taking a beating. Gold has dropped below $1,600/oz to an intraday low of $1,555/oz yesterday. The best investors are said to be abandoning their yellow metal for more “productive” positions. From Bloomberg:
‘Billionaire investors George Soros and Louis Moore Bacon cut their stakes in exchange-traded products backed by gold last quarter as futures dropped the most in more than eight years. John Paulson maintained his holding.
‘The fourth-quarter decisions by Soros and Bacon may bolster speculation that gold’s 12-year bull run is coming to an end as economic data from the US to China show signs of recovery, curbing haven demand.
‘Soros Fund Management LLC reduced its investment in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest fund backed by the metal, by 55% to 600,000 shares as of Dec. 31 from three months earlier, a US Securities and Exchange Commission filing showed yesterday. Bacon’s Moore Capital Management LP sold its entire stake in the SPDR fund and lowered holdings in the Sprott Physical Gold Trust. Paulson & Co., the largest investor in SPDR, kept its stake at 21.8 million shares.’
And under the headline ‘Gold Sinks Through $1,600 on Recovery Hopes,’ the Financial Times adds:
‘Gold prices tumbled… for the first time in six months as investors turned to other assets amid hopes of an economic recovery.’
Recovery? The US, Eurozone and Japanese economies are all (according to the most recent quarterly results) shrinking, not growing. What kind of a recovery is this?
Nevertheless, mainstream opinion believes this is no time to cower in the safety of cash…or gold. Take chances. Buy stocks! Look at Buffett. He’s teamed up with a Brazilian tycoon; they’re paying $28 billion for a ketchup company.
Well, what do you think? Are they right?
Why would you ever want to hold gold, anyway? It is dumb and lifeless. It issues no upbeat press releases. It never ‘beats analysts’ estimates’. It doesn’t come out with a slick new handheld device…or announce a major acquisition.
None of the good news you hope to get from an investment ever comes from gold. No matter how much you own, it doesn’t seem to care about you; it makes no effort whatever to increase shareholder value.
Instead, it just sits there…like an old umbrella next to the front door, only useful when it rains. War? Gold goes up. Market crash? Gold goes up. Inflation? Gold goes up.
End of the world? Who knows, maybe gold would go up too.
So, you decide. What’s ahead? Good news? Or bad news? Will the 100 leading economists be right…or wrong? Fair weather…or foul?
It’s impossible to say. So, we hedge our bets. We own some real investments – stocks, bonds, real estate – and hope the 100 leading economists know what they are talking about.
And we hold on to our gold too…in case they turn out to be the numbskulls they usually are.

Gold & Silver Nearing MAJOR Long Term Support
Posted by Chris Vermulen: The Gold & Oil Guy
on Thursday, 21 February 2013 7:11
Gold and silver along with their related miners have been under a lot of selling pressure the last few months. Prices have fallen far enough to make most traders and investors start to panic and close out their long term positions which is a bullish signal in my opinion.
My trading tactic for both swing trading and day trading thrive on entering and exiting positions when panic trading hits an investment. General rule of thumb is to buy when others are extremely fearful and cannot hold on to a losing position any longer. When they are selling I am usually slowly accumulating a long position.
Looking at the charts below of gold and silver you can see the strong selling over the past two weeks. When you get drops this sharp investors tend to focus on their account statements watching the value drop at an accelerated rate to the point where they ignore the charts and just liquidate everything they have to preserve their capital.
Gold Bullion Weekly Chart:
The price and outlook of gold has not really changed much in the past year. It remains in a major bull market and has been taking a breather, nothing more. Stepping back and reviewing the weekly chart it’s clear that gold is nearing long term support. With panic selling hitting the gold market and long term support only $20 – $30 dollars away this investment starts to look really tasty.
But if price breaks below the $1540 level and closed down there on a weekly basis then all bets are off as this would trigger a wave of selling that would make the recent selling look insignificant. And the uptrend in gold would now be over.
Silver Bullion Weekly Chart:
Silver price is in the same boat as its big sister (Yellow Gold). Only difference is that silver has larger price swings of 2-3x more than gold. This is what attracts more traders and investors but unfortunately the masses do not know how to manage leveraged investments like this and end up losing their shirts.
A breakdown below the $26.11 price would likely trigger a sharp drop back down to the $17.50 level so be careful.
Gold Mining Stocks – Monthly Chart:
If you wanna see a scary chart then look at what could happen or is happening to gold miner stocks. This very could be happening as we speak and why I have been pounding the table for months no to get long gold, silver or miners until we see complete panic selling or a bullish basing pattern form on the charts. We have not seen either of these things take place although panic selling is slowly ramping up this week.
There will be some very frustrated gold bugs if they take another 33% hair cut in value.
Precious Metals Trend and Trading Conclusion:
In short, the precious metal sector remains in a cyclical bull market. That being said and looking at the daily charts the prices have been consolidating and are in a down trend currently. Until we see some type of bottoming pattern or price action form it is best to sit on the side lines and watch the emotional traders get caught up and do the wrong thing.
The next two weeks will be crucial for gold, silver and miner stocks. If metals cannot find support and close below the key support levels things could get really ugly fast. If you would like to receive my daily analysis and know what I am trading then check out my newsletter at: www.TheGoldAndOilGuy.com
Chris Vermeulen

He goes so far as to say now might be the best buying opportunity in the whole bull market.
“[Gold’s] price has been really held back, the fundamentals have gotten better by the day,” he says. “Yet, if you look at the price, it’s been down — totally out of whack with what’s going on in the fundamentals.”
….read more HERE

28 Charts Every Gold Investor Must See & Gold Demand Trends
Posted by World Gold Council, GoldSilverWorlds, Business Insider
on Tuesday, 19 February 2013 14:56
Executive summary
Annual gold demand measured on a value basis increased to an all-time record of US$236.4bn in 2012. On a tonnage basis, demand totalled 4,405.5 tonnes (t) in 2012, down by 4% from 2011 as an increase in demand from institutional investors and central banks only partly offset a year-on-year decline in consumer demand. Major themes from 2012 are discussed below, including a dichotomous year in India, central bank purchases reaching a 48-year high and China’s persistent devotion to gold.
….25 pages of Charts & Trends from the World Gold Council HERE (Download (PDF 1.0 MB))
….commentary, charts & Highlights at GoldSilverWorlds HERE
28 Charts Every Gold Investor Must See
US Funds Frank Holmes, an expert on commodities, recently presented a monster slide deck that made the ultimate bull case for gold.
We pulled the 28 very best charts from the 77-slide presentation.

The Big Disconnect: What Does it Mean?
Posted by Michael A. Berry, Ph.D.
on Monday, 18 February 2013 14:15
Gold is declining once again this morning. In fact gold has fallen quite dramatically from its high on October 4th of last year at $1797.70 an ounce. Gold trades, as I write, at $1608 an ounce, a decline from its October high of almost 11%.
Gold bugs everywhere are fretting and the gold haters are saying “I told you so.” As you can see, the market gods have not been kind and may have labeled gold the “barbarous relic” John Maynard Keynes dubbed (he was referring to the gold standard at the time) almost a century ago (Monetary Reform 1924).
So has gold run its course? Are we now out of the economic woods? It is interesting to note that the CRB commodity index has taken off at the same time. This would seem to imply that at least the market believes that there’s growth somewhere that will require significant commodity discovery. But it is gold and silver that have not followed suit.
Hand-in-hand, the XAU index has fallen and continues to keep pace on the downside with price of gold. Its decline over the same period is almost 24%. So investors have taken gold and silver stocks, even the legacy producers, out to the woodshed and shot them.
The emerging leader of the legacy gold stock universe today is Goldcorp. By all measures except share price, Goldcorp has provided investors with superior performance. In the fourth quarter alone Goldcorp produced a $504 million profit (earnings attributable to shareholders) primarily from its Canadian Red Lake and Mexican Penasquito mines. The Globe and Mail suggests this 25% increase in shareholder profits, before adjustments, positioned Goldcorp well for the coming year. We agree.
The company has now developed 67.1 million ounces of proven and probable gold resource.
During the past quarter Goldcorp produced 700,400 ounces of gold. At Penasquito alone the company produced 112,900 ounces of gold and 5.2 million ounces of silver. Costs were expected to be between $525 to $575 per gold ounce.
Operating cash flows for the year before working capital changes totaled $2.4 billion or $2.97 per share. The company increased its monthly dividend 11% to 5 cents a share. On an annual basis the dividend yield is now over 2%. Goldcorp also has reduced its risk, increased its production profile and generated significant free cash flow. Goldcorp looks to become a consolidator in the industry with its significant cash hoard.
As you can see in the following chart of Goldcorp’s share price the stock has declined 29% since its high $47.42 on September 21. It is difficult to explain this decline under the circumstances of such superior operating performance in almost all aspects of the company. The only reasonable explanation is that the market believes that the price of gold is going to fall further.
We are not in that camp. As competitive currency devaluations continue around the world and as the central bankers continue to accumulate gold and print fit currency to depress interest rates, gold and silver and other precious metals, as well as hard assets, must eventually appreciate in price.
There is of course one outstanding issue that we discussed in Wednesday’s Morning Note. It is the issue that all central bankers fear most. Could it be that markets are discounting a deflationary economic scenario in their valuation of gold? Will cash reign supreme?
It doesn’t appear likely that central bankers of the world, at this stage, will be curtailing their quantitative easing programs anytime soon with Western growth depressed. And given the recent and 3 1/2 month increase in the CRB commodity index (see graph of the CRB below) and the apparent resilience of the largely debt-free emerging world, global deflation does not seem imminent.
Therefore we believe the price of gold either has or is likely to make bottom in the near future. The leverage of the legacy gold producers will be very significant in the next year or two. For the most part the legacy gold producers issue dividends. If it is to be deflation as Gary shilling suggests then all bets are off. However the strong driver of the quality-of-life, long-term secular cycle now underway would seem to undermine a deflationary scenario in our view.
Goldcorp CEO Chuck Jeannes believes that there is simply a disconnect between the gold market, the gold indexes and the price of the shares of the gold miners. Yesterday in an interview with Toronto’s Globe and Mail he explained this disconnect,
“Relative to our peers Goldcorp is doing quite well … we are the top performer among the senior stocks … on an absolute basis we’ve seen over five years cash flow per share has gone up over 300% and our share price is up only 65% so there is a disconnect … the leverage we provide to increases in the gold price. It’s a complex situation as the gold price ran up so quickly to $1900 and people didn’t believe in it … but it’s also a fact there’s some operational issues in our sector, some political risk challenges where countries have taken assets … and there’s been a lot of cost inflation which has eaten into margins of gold producers. But I’m happy to say we were all subject to the first issue of investor’s view of the gold price. But at Goldcorp we’ve reduced our risk, maintained our costs and haven’t had any significant issues.”
The plight of the juniors in the exploration space is quite different however. For the most part these companies do not have cash flows and may not have developed resources yet. It is very clear that the junior resource sector is suffering dramatically from the fear of unsustainability of operations and the difficulty of producing a discovery in the short run.
In the long run this means that all discovered and readily available commodities, but particularly gold and silver, will become less available. Pierre Lassonde, chairman of Franco- Nevada, has this made this point numerous times in the past few months.
Discovery and mine development may be a 10 year process. If this is the case within the next few years there should be significant upward price pressure on the metals in general and gold and silver specifically.
Michael A. Berry, Ph.D.
Morning Notes
The material herein is for informational purposes only and is not intended to and does not constitute the rendering of investment advice or the solicitation of an offer to buy securities. The foregoing discussion contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (The Act). In particular when used in the preceding discussion the words “plan,” confident that, believe, scheduled, expect, or intend to, and similar conditional expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements subject to the safe harbor created by the ACT. Such statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties and actual results could differ materially from those expressed in any of the forward looking statements. Such risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to future events and financial performance of the company which are inherently uncertain and actual events and / or results may differ materially. In addition we may review investments that are not registered in the U.S. We cannot attest to nor certify the correctness of any information in this note. We own shares in Goldcorp. Please consult your financial advisor and perform your own due diligence before considering any companies mentioned in this informational bulletin.


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